Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:4.2.1.22 (cystathionine beta-synthase)
965 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to clarify whether cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) could differentiate groups of patients with various vascular diagnosis, CBS was studied in cultured human skin fibroblasts from 99 human subjects diagnosed as homozygotes or heterozygotes for CBS deficiency or suffering from atherosclerotic vascular disease or Down's syndrome (prone to less atherosclerosis). In addition, embryonic human skin fibroblasts and controls were analysed for CBS. We found significant group differences but the overlap in the hetero- and homozygotes for CBS deficiency was too extensive to allow any individual diagnosis based on cell culture studies. CBS activity was significantly lower in the atherosclerotic patients as compared to control subjects. The difference was mostly due to much higher CBS activity in the younger controls. Age dependency was markedly emphasized by very high values from embryonic cells. A strong negative correlation was noted for age and CBS activity in control subjects but not in the atherosclerotic patients. The results are important for the discussion of homocysteine in atherosclerosis and point to the importance of donor age on CBS activity in cultured cells. In addition, diagnosis of hetero-homozygosity for CBS activity is not possible on an individual basis by this method. Further studies in cell culture systems are needed to investigate if young patients (less than 45 years old) with atherosclerotic disease could be identified by low CBS activity in fibroblast cultures as indicated by this study.
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PMID:Age dependency of cystathionine beta-synthase activity in human fibroblasts in homocyst(e)inemia and atherosclerotic vascular disease. 138 57

Murine genes homologous to those contributing to the Down syndrome (DS) phenotype in man are currently of interest because of their potential for providing animal models for the study of specific DS symptoms. Most of the genes mapping to human chromosome 21q22, where the DS genes are concentrated, are related to sequences located on mouse chromosome 16. Others, however, are known to map to mouse chromosome 10, and two genes, cystathionine beta-synthase (Cbs) and alpha-A-crystallin (Crya-1), have been localized to the proximal portion of mouse chromosome 17. In this paper, we show that the two genes mapping to human chromosome 21q22 and mouse chromosome 17 are very tightly linked in mouse, being separated by at least 70 kb, but not more than 130 kb. The very close physical linkage of mouse Cbs and Crya-1, combined with data that localize homologs of the closely flanking markers H2k and Pim-1 to human chromosome 6, suggests that the human 21q22/mouse chromosome 17 conserved segment is of a very limited total physical size and is likely to contain a relatively small number of genes.
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PMID:The alpha-A-crystallin and cystathionine beta-synthase genes are physically very closely linked in proximal mouse chromosome 17. 234 94

Cystathionine beta-synthase deficiency results in severe homocysteinaemia, precocious arteriosclerosis and frequent thromboembolism. In addition, antithrombin III activity and factor VII are low. Arteriosclerosis seems to be increased in heterozygotes as well (cystathionine beta-synthase gene dosage 50%) but rare in Down syndrome (cystathionine beta-synthase gene dosage 150%). In the present study total plasma homocysteine was high in three homozygotes, slightly increased in 20 obligate heterozygotes but not reduced in nine subjects with Down syndrome when compared to controls. After methionine loading, increases of homocysteine were pathologically high in 14 of 20 heterozygotes but was not, as expected, low in subjects with Down syndrome. Antithrombin III activity and factor VII antigen tended to be low in homozygotes but were normal in heterozygotes. In Down syndrome antithrombin III activity was reduced and factor VII antigen normal. There were no correlations between levels of homocysteine, antithrombin III activity and factor VII antigen. Thus, subjects with Down syndrome seem not to exhibit the expected gene dosage effect on homocysteine metabolism which could explain their reduced proneness to develop arteriosclerosis, nor do antithrombin III activity or factor VII antigen seem to be related to homocysteine metabolism.
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PMID:Homocysteine, factor VII and antithrombin III in subjects with different gene dosage for cystathionine beta-synthase. 253 42

The human gene for cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS), the enzyme deficient in classical homocystinuria, has been assigned to the subtelomeric region of band 21q22.3 by in situ hybridization of a rat cDNA probe to structurally rearranged chromosomes 21. The homologous locus in the mouse (Cbs) was mapped to the proximal half of mouse chromosome 17 by Southern analysis of Chinese hamster X mouse somatic cell hybrid DNA. Thus, CBS/Cbs and the gene for alpha A-crystalline (CRYA1/Crya-1 or Acry-1) form a conserved linkage group on human (HSA) chromosome region 21q22.3 and mouse (MMU) chromosome 17 region A-C. Features of Down syndrome (DS) caused by three copies of these genes should not be present in mice trisomic for MMU 16 that have been proposed as animal models for DS. Mice partially trisomic for MMU 16 or MMU 17 should allow gene-specific dissection of the trisomy 21 phenotype.
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PMID:The gene for cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) maps to the subtelomeric region on human chromosome 21q and to proximal mouse chromosome 17. 289 61

Previous studies have reported erythrocyte macrocytosis in adults and children with Down syndrome (DS), the significance of which remains unclear. We compared hematological parameters of 50 DS children aged 2 to 15 years, divided into three age groups, with those of 68 aged-matched healthy children. Patients with DS had a significantly increased mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and hemoglobin in all groups when compared with the controls. Erythrocyte creatine content, hexokinase (Hk) activity, erythrocyte and serum folates, vitamin B12, haptoglobin, serum iron, and ferritin were tested. All of these parameters were not significantly different from those of the control group. We conclude that macrocytosis may not be an expression of reduced red cell survival but rather of an altered folate remethylation pathway, secondary to enhanced cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) activity, the gene for which is present on chromosome 21.
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PMID:Hematological studies in children with Down syndrome. 873 44

The gene for cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) is located on chromosome 21 and is overexpressed in children with Down syndrome (DS), or trisomy 21. The dual purpose of the present study was to evaluate the impact of overexpression of the CBS gene on homocysteine metabolism in children with DS and to determine whether the supplementation of trisomy 21 lymphoblasts in vitro with selected nutrients would shift the genetically induced metabolic imbalance. Plasma samples were obtained from 42 children with karyotypically confirmed full trisomy 21 and from 36 normal siblings (mean age 7.4 years). Metabolites involved in homocysteine metabolism were measured and compared to those of normal siblings used as controls. Lymphocyte DNA methylation status was determined as a functional endpoint. The results indicated that plasma levels of homocysteine, methionine, S-adenosylhomocysteine, and S-adenosylmethionine were all significantly decreased in children with DS and that their lymphocyte DNA was hypermethylated relative to that in normal siblings. Plasma levels of cystathionine and cysteine were significantly increased, consistent with an increase in CBS activity. Plasma glutathione levels were significantly reduced in the children with DS and may reflect an increase in oxidative stress due to the overexpression of the superoxide dismutase gene, also located on chromosome 21. The addition of methionine, folinic acid, methyl-B(12), thymidine, or dimethylglycine to the cultured trisomy 21 lymphoblastoid cells improved the metabolic profile in vitro. The increased activity of CBS in children with DS significantly alters homocysteine metabolism such that the folate-dependent resynthesis of methionine is compromised. The decreased availability of homocysteine promotes the well-established "folate trap," creating a functional folate deficiency that may contribute to the metabolic pathology of this complex genetic disorder.
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PMID:Homocysteine metabolism in children with Down syndrome: in vitro modulation. 1139 81

Cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) catalyses the condensation of serine and homocysteine to form cystathionine, an intermediate step in the synthesis of cysteine. Human CBS encodes five distinct 5' non-coding exons, the most frequent termed CBS -1a and CBS -1b, each transcribed from its own unique GC-rich TATA-less promoter. The minimal transcriptional region (-3792 to -3667) of the CBS -1b promoter was defined by 5'- and 3'-deletions, and transient transfections of reporter gene constructs in HepG2 cells, characterized by CBS transcription exclusively from the -1b promoter. Included in this 125 bp region are 3 GC-boxes (termed GC-a, GC-b and GC-c), an inverted CAAT-box and an E-box. By gel-shift and supershift assays, binding of specificity protein (Sp)1 and Sp3 to the GC-box elements, upstream stimulatory factor 1 (USF-1) to the E-box, and both nuclear factor (NF)-Y and an NF-1-like factor to the CAAT box could be demonstrated. By transient trans fections and reporter gene assays in HepG2 and Drosophila SL2 cells, a functional interplay was indicated between NF-Y binding to the CAAT-box, or between USF-1 binding to the E-box, and Sp1/Sp3 binding to the GC-box elements. In SL2 cells, NF-Y and Sp1/Sp3 were synergistic. Furthermore, both Sp1 and the long Sp3 isoform transactivated the CBS -1b minimal promoter; however, the short Sp3 isoforms were potent repressors. These results may explain the cell- or tissue-specific regulation of CBS transcription, and clarify the bases for alterations in CBS gene expression in human disease and Down's syndrome.
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PMID:Transcriptional regulation of the human cystathionine beta-synthase -1b basal promoter: synergistic transactivation by transcription factors NF-Y and Sp1/Sp3. 1141 40

Cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) catalyzes the condensation of serine and homocysteine to form cystathionine, an intermediate step in the synthesis of cysteine. We previously characterized the CBS -1b minimal promoter (-3792 to -3667) and found that Sp1/Sp3, nuclear factor Y, and USF-1 were involved in the regulation of basal promoter activity (Ge, Y., Konrad, M. A., Matherly, L. H., Taub, J. W. (2001) Biochem. J. 357, 97-105). In this study, the critical cis-elements and transcription factors in the CBS -1b upstream region (-4046 to -3792) were examined in HT1080 and HepG2 cells, which differ approximately 10-fold in levels of CBS transcripts transcribed from the CBS -1b promoter. In DNase I footprint and gel shift analyses and transient transfections of mutant CBS -1b promoter constructs into HT1080 and HepG2 cells, transcriptionally important roles for Sp1/Sp3 binding to three GC boxes and one GT box and for binding of myeloid zinc finger 1-like proteins to two myeloid zinc finger 1 elements were indicated. In gel shift assays, very low levels of Sp1/Sp3 DNA-protein complexes were detected in HT1080 cells compared with HepG2 cells despite comparable levels of nuclear factor Y and USF-1 binding and similar levels of Sp1 and Sp3 proteins on Western blots. Mixing of HT1080 and HepG2 nuclear extracts resulted in no difference in total Sp factor binding in gel shift assays, thus excluding a role for an unknown activator or inhibitor in the disparate Sp1/Sp3 binding between the lines. Increased Sp1/Sp3 binding in gel shift assays was observed upon treatment of HT1080 nuclear extracts with protein kinase A, and decreased Sp1/Sp3 binding resulted from treatment of HepG2 nuclear extracts with calf alkaline phosphatase, suggesting a role for changes in Sp1/Sp3 phosphorylation in transcription factor binding and transactivation of the CBS -1b promoter. Characterization of CBS promoter structure and function should clarify the molecular bases for variations in CBS gene expression in genetic diseases and the relationship between CBS and Down syndrome.
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PMID:Transcriptional regulation of cell-specific expression of the human cystathionine beta -synthase gene by differential binding of Sp1/Sp3 to the -1b promoter. 1156 58

Down syndrome (DS) is the most common human chromosomal abnormality caused by an extra copy of chromosome 21 and characterized by somatic anomalies and mental retardation. The phenotype of DS is thought to result from overexpression of genes encoded on chromosome 21. Although several studies reported mRNA levels of genes localized on chromosome 21, mRNA data cannot be simply extrapolated to protein levels. Furthermore, most protein data have been generated using immunochemical methods. In this study we investigated expression of three proteins (cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS), pyridoxal kinase (PDXK), ES1 protein homolog, mitochondrial precursor (ES1)) whose genes are encoded on chromosome 21 in fetal DS (n = 8; mean gestational age of 19.8 +/- 2.0 weeks) and controls (n = 7; mean gestational age of 18.8 +/- 2.2 weeks) brains (cortex) using proteomic technologies. Two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) with subsequent in-gel digestion of spots and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) spectroscopic identification followed by quantification of spots with specific software was applied. Subsequent quantitative analysis of CBS and PDXK revealed levels comparable between DS and controls. By contrast, ES1 was two-fold elevated (P < 0.01) in fetal DS brain. This protein shows significant homology with the E. coli SCRP-27A/ELBB and zebrafish ES1 protein and contains a potential targeting sequence to mitochondria in its N-terminal region. Based on the assumption that structural similarities reflect functional relationship, it may be speculated that ES1 is serving a basic function in mitochondria. Although no function of the human ES1 protein is known yet, ES1 may be a candidate protein involved in the pathogenesis of the brain deficit in DS.
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PMID:Expression of cystathionine beta-synthase, pyridoxal kinase, and ES1 protein homolog (mitochondrial precursor) in fetal Down syndrome brain. 1508 24

Recent studies suggest that apart from nitric oxide (NO) and carbon monoxide (CO), hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is another inorganic gaseous mediator in the cardiovascular system. H2S is synthesized from L-cysteine by either cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) or cystathionin gamma--lyase (CSE), both using pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (vitamin B6) as a cofactor. CBS is the main H2S-producing enzyme in the brain and CSE is involved in H2S formation in the cardiovascular system. H2S induces hypotension in vivo and vasodilation vitro by opening KATP channels in vascular smooth muscle cells. Chronic administration of CSE inhibitor induces arterial hypertension in the rat. In addition, decreased H2S generation has been demonstrated in the vasculature of spontaneously hypertensive rat, in experimental hypertension induced by NO synthase blockade, and in hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension, and administration of exogenous H2S donor has significant therapeutic effects in these models. Deficiency of H2S may contribute to atherogenesis in some patients with hyperhomocysteinemia, in whom the metabolism of homocysteine to cysteine and H2S is compromised by vitamin B6 deficiency. Reduced H2S production in the brain was observed in patients with Alzheimer's disease. On the other hand, excess of H2S may lead to mental retardation in patients with Down's syndrome and may be involved in the pathogenesis of hypotension associated with septic shock.
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PMID:[Hydrogen sulfide as a biologically active mediator in the cardiovascular system]. 1528 Jul 98


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